Hepatoprotective effect of 17β-estradiol as antioxidant modulators against stress damage

Liver is one of the most important organs affected by exercise. According to the literature a few study to date has investigated the effects of estrogen supplementation on exercise-induced oxidative stress in liver tissue of rats. We aimed to investigate the effects of estrogen supplementation on ox...

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Published inHepatitis monthly Vol. 15; no. 2; p. e22633
Main Authors Can, Serpil, Cigsar, Gulsen, Gur Ozabacigil, Fatma, Aksak Karamese, Selina, Selli, Jale, Bacak, Gulsum, Gedikli, Semin, Sahin, Gonul Zisan, Yigit, Serdar, Can, Ismail, Gul, Mustafa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Iran Kowsar 09.02.2015
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Summary:Liver is one of the most important organs affected by exercise. According to the literature a few study to date has investigated the effects of estrogen supplementation on exercise-induced oxidative stress in liver tissue of rats. We aimed to investigate the effects of estrogen supplementation on oxidative stress markers in liver tissue of exercised rats. Male rats (n = 35) were divided as estrogen supplemented (n = 18) and non-supplemented groups (n = 17); these groups were further divided as rest and eccentric exercised groups. Eccentric exercise groups were further divided as rats killed after 1 hour and 48 hours of eccentric exercise. Estrogen (10 mg/kg) was administered subcutaneously for 30 days. Eccentric exercise was applied as treadmill run (15° downhill, 20 m/min) consisting of periods of "5 min" run and 2 min rest repeated 18 times. The rat liver was examined biochemically and histologically. Activities of GST, GSH-Px, CAT, SOD and MDA concentration were also measured spectrophotometrically. Some disruptions were detected in experimental groups compared with the control group. Additionally, exercise training caused an increase in SOD and decrease in GSH-Px activities in some experimental groups. SOD activities increased significantly in group 3 (Estrogen (-), eccentric exercise (+) killed (after 1 h), compared with group 5 (Estrogen (-), eccentric exercise (+) killed (after 48 h). On the other hand, GSH-Px activities were also significantly decreased in groups 3, 4 and 5 compared with the control group. Leukocyte infiltration in liver increased after 48 hours compared with after 1 hour and estrogen supplementation was not able to prevent this infiltration. Estrogen seemed to be not very effective to prevent eccentric exercise-induced liver damage.
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ISSN:1735-143X
1735-3408
DOI:10.5812/hepatmon.22633